Skip to main content
  • free

    Life giving resources. Faithfully delivered.

    FREE delivery on orders over £10

  • UK

    Serving over 2 million Christians in the UK

    with Bibles, Books and Church Supplies

  • Church

    Our Buy-Now-Pay-Later accounts used

    by over 4,000 UK Churches & Schools

  • Excellent 4.8 out of 5

    Trustpilot

Reparative Universities: Why Diversity Alone Won't Solve Racism in Higher Ed

[Hardback]

by Ariana Gonzalez Stokas

    • Author

      Ariana Gonzalez Stokas

    • Book Format

      Hardcover

    • Publisher

      Johns Hopkins University Press

    • Published

      March 2023

    Read full description

    Today's Price

    £20.08

    Save 31%

    Free delivery icon

    Free UK Delivery


    Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days


    • Paypal
    • Google Pay
    • Apple Pay
    • Visa
    • Mastercard
    • Amex

    Reparative Universities: Why Diversity Alone Won't Solve Racism in Higher Ed

    Today's Price £20.08



    Product Description

    A timely investigation of why diversity alone is insufficient in higher education and how universities can use reparative actions to become anti-racist institutions.

    As institutions increasingly reckon with histories entangled with slavery and Indigenous dispossession, diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) efforts occupy a central role in the strategy and resources of higher education. Yet reparation is rarely offered as a viable strategy for institutional transformation. In Reparative Universities, Ariana González Stokas undertakes a critical and decolonial analysis of DEI work, linking contemporary practices of diversity to longer colonial histories. González Stokas argues that diversity is an insufficient concept for efforts concerned with anti-oppression, anti-racism, equity, and decolonization. Given its historical ties to colonialism, can higher education foster reconciliation and healing?

    Reparation is offered as a pathway toward untangling higher education from its colonial roots. González Stokas develops the term "epistemic reparation" to describe a mode of social-historical accountability that can already be seen at work in historical examples, as well as current events in the United States, South Africa, and Canada. Recent legal decisions by Georgetown University and the Princeton Theological seminary to enact economic recompense for buying and selling human beings are evidence of attempts to redress higher education's violent histories and the colonial structures they reproduce every day on college campuses.

    Engaging with a broad range of theories from decolonial philosophy to organizational psychology, González Stokas offers a pathway--guided by reparative activities--for institutional workers frustrated by what often feels, as Sara Ahmed describes, like "banging one's head against a brick wall." Reparative Universities offers insight into why DEI efforts have been disconnected from past injustices and why unsettling diversity and engaging meaningful repair are critical for the future of higher education.

    Specification

    • Author

      Ariana Gonzalez Stokas

    • Book Format

      Hardcover

    • Publisher

      Johns Hopkins University Press

    • Published

      March 2023

    • Weight

      666g

    • Dimensions

      133 x 201 x 41 mm

    • ISBN

      9781421445601

    • ISBN-10

      1421445603

    • Eden Code

      5703630

    More Information

    • Author/Creator: Ariana Gonzalez Stokas

    • ISBN: 9781421445601

    • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press

    • Release Date: March 2023

    • Weight: 666g

    • Dimensions: 133 x 201 x 41 mm

    • Eden Code: 5703630


    Product Q+A

    Ask a Question

    Recently Viewed